A Junior Library Guild Selection
A Bank Street College of Education Best Children's Book of the Year
Fully Booked by Kirkus Reviews Editors' Pick of the Week
“A fast-paced, twisty story that keeps readers on their toes . . . This spy thriller is peppered with rich period details. Shelby’s character feels like an authentic portrayal of an intelligent, college-bound teenager of the time, lending the book the realistic air of the past come to vivid life. A fascinating dive into a segment of history that reverberates today.” —Kirkus Reviews
“Tensely wrought . . . A high-stakes spy thriller that features period-relevant intrigue and simmering romance.” —Publishers Weekly
“The ingenious McCrina (The Silent Unseen, 2022) ensures that readers will have a field day with this well-plotted, engaging thriller, and that’s no lie.” —Booklist
“McCrina develops an exciting, engrossing plot—as an unknown Soviet mole and known American operatives close in, Shelby and Maksim must choose what secrets to share, whether to trust one another, and how to save each other . . . Thrilling, historically accurate, and morally complex, this title is sure to please readers of Elizabeth Wein.” —School Library Journal
“McCrina provides fascinating details about the Cold War era . . . Her characters, authentic development, and sharp dialogue keep the reader glued to the page.” —The Historical Novel Society
“A thrilling dive into the complexities of the Cold War, I’ll Tell You No Lies also provides a heartbreaking glimpse of lesser-known Ukrainian experiences during WWII. With unexpected twists and vibrant characters, McCrina’s sharp, powerful prose shines in this brilliantly researched, fast-paced novel.” —Erin Litteken, author of The Memory Keeper of Kyiv
“Amanda McCrina has hit it out of the ballpark with this tense and lean Cold War thriller, meticulously researched and tightly written. What I loved most about this novel is that it relied on no tropes nor stereotypes, but instead plunged the reader into a breathless time and place with authenticity and nuance. Brava.” —Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch, author of Winterkill
“Tense, thrilling, and well-researched, Amanda McCrina’s I’ll Tell You No Lies immerses the reader into the fever pitch of the Cold War with captivating twists and turns.” —Adrian Lysenko, author of Five Stalks of Grain
“McCrina’s writing soars in this masterfully built Cold War-era thriller that will keep readers on the edge of their seats with its astonishing twists and turns. Start to finish a compulsive and emotional read.” —Marina Scott, author of The Hunger Between Us
09/01/2023
Gr 7 Up—When 18-year-old Shelby Blaine gets relocated with her father to a new Air Force base, she is not expecting to find a wounded Soviet pilot hiding in their new house. Maksim insists he is a defector seeking refuge in the United States. What should Shelby do, when FBI and CIA agents arrive, looking for a KGB spy? When she confronts Maksim, the truth about his past becomes even murkier. Is the young man a defector or an enemy agent? Is he Ukrainian or Russian? What was he doing during WWII? McCrina develops an exciting, engrossing plot—as an unknown Soviet mole and known American operatives close in, Shelby and Maksim must choose what secrets to share, whether to trust one another, and how to save each other. The novel is sensitive to the complicated psychology and layered identities of the central and peripheral characters: Maksim is no more complicated than his CIA handler, a Jewish-German immigrant who adopts the bland surname "Jones." McCrina also has an eye for details that make the 1950s historical setting immersive, whether naming a brand of lipstick, describing summer in upstate New York, or pointing to a specific, Ukrainian neighborhood in Toronto. As to the romance: is a strapping young man likely to be up for some smooches while suffering from a broken ankle and ethylene glycol poisoning? Probably not? Will readers be cheering on Shelby and Maksim? Absolutely! VERDICT Thrilling, historically accurate, and morally complex, this title is sure to please readers of Elizabeth Wein.—Katherine Magyarody
2023-05-24
An American teenager becomes entangled in a web of lies with a Soviet defector during the Cold War.
The year is 1955, and Shelby Blaine is grieving the death of her mother three weeks prior when her life is turned upside down again. Col. Blaine, Shelby’s father, is in Air Force intelligence, and he’s been given a special assignment that takes them from their military base in Germany to upstate New York, where his expertise is required to debrief a Soviet defector. Eighteen-year-old Shelby makes the acquaintance of the defector, a young Ukrainian pilot named Maksym Kostyshyn, at a welcoming party, but the next day she learns that he has escaped without a trace after the military found a hole in his story. When Maksym makes contact with her, Shelby has to decide whether to turn him in under suspicion that he is in fact a KGB operative or to believe him when he insists that he is telling the truth. What follows is a fast-paced, twisty story that keeps readers on their toes. Along with Shelby, they will be unsure who to believe and who can be trusted. This spy thriller is peppered with rich period details. Shelby’s character feels like an authentic portrayal of an intelligent, college-bound teenager of the time, lending the book the realistic air of the past come to vivid life.
A fascinating dive into a segment of history that reverberates today. (author’s note) (Historical thriller. 13-18)